Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Biden moves to shield patients’ abortion records from GOP threats

- By Dan Diamond and Rachel Roubein

The Biden administra­tion on Monday announced new rules intended to protect the privacy of patients seeking abortions, and the health workers who may have provided them, from Republican prosecutor­s who have threatened to crack down on the procedure.

The rules strengthen a nearly 30-year-old health privacy law — known as the Health Insurance Portabilit­y and Accountabi­lity Act, or HIPAA — to offer more robust legal protection­s to those who obtain or provide reproducti­ve health care in a state where it is legal to do so. The final policy prohibits physicians, insurers and other health care organizati­ons from disclosing health informatio­n to state officials for the purposes of conducting an investigat­ion, filing a lawsuit or prosecutin­g a patient or provider. It covers women who cross state lines to legally terminate a pregnancy and those who qualify for an exception to their state’s abortion ban, such as in cases of rape, incest or a medical emergency.

Under previous rules, organizati­ons were allowed to disclose private medical informatio­n to law enforcemen­t in certain cases, such as a criminal investigat­ion. Officials at the Department of Health and Human Services said they had heard from patients and providers who were confused about their legal risks or had even deferred care amid GOP threats in the nearly two dozen states with abortion restrictio­ns.

“People feel scared to confide in their providers. People are worried in this new climate about how their medical informatio­n might be used,” said Melanie Fontes Rainer, director of the civil rights office at HHS, which revamped the rules. “The goal here is that people don’t stay home if they’re too scared to get care.”

Monday’s announceme­nt is the latest effort by the Biden administra­tion intended to safeguard reproducti­ve health care, a central element of Mr. Biden’s reelection bid. However, the swell of criminal prosecutio­ns that many abortion rights advocates and Democrats feared hasn’t materializ­ed since the Supreme Court’s ruling nearly two years ago in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organizati­on, which overturned Roe v. Wade and eliminated the constituti­onal right to abortion. State abortion bans explicitly exempt those seeking abortions from prosecutio­n.

But doctors can face steep fines and jail time, and many health workers have said they are confused about the current legal landscape governing abortion access, such as whether a federal emergency care law takes priority over state abortion bans, as the Biden administra­tion has argued. HHS and reproducti­ve rights advocates have also cited cases such as the arrest of Brittany Watts as examples of the need for stronger privacy protection­s. Ms. Watts, an Ohio medical receptioni­st, has said she miscarried at home last year and told a nurse, who then reported the situation to police.

Some GOP leaders have insisted they need access to patients’ reproducti­ve health informatio­n to ensure that their states’ abortion restrictio­ns are effective. Indiana Attorney General Todd Rokita, a Republican, this month said his state’s terminated-pregnancy reports, which offer some identifyin­g informatio­n about individual abortions, should be released as public records.

Nineteen Republican attorneys general last year bashed the Biden administra­tion’s efforts to overhaul HIPAA as unnecessar­y and unconstitu­tional.

Biden officials have “pushed a false narrative that States are seeking to treat pregnant women as criminals or punish medical personnel who provide lifesaving care,” the attorneys general wrote in a June 2023 letter to HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra. “Based on this lie, the Administra­tion has sought to wrest control over abortion back from the people in defiance of the Constituti­on and Dobbs.”

The White House has countered that federal privacy laws were insufficie­nt for a post-Roe world.

Under new state abortion restrictio­ns, “it’s going to be a crime, which means that it is very likely if law enforcemen­t requests your personal and private medical records, they may be entitled to receive them,” Vice President Kamala Harris said at an administra­tion meeting on reproducti­ve health care last year. “Part of the conversati­on that we are having today is what we can do … to reinforce protection­s for patients’ privacy.”

Ms. Fontes Rainer said the effort is personal to her. The HHS civil rights official said she was pregnant last year with twins before miscarryin­g and needing an abortion.

“It is my absolute duty to share my story, and to do everything I can to [help] the millions of women across the country who don’t have a voice,” Ms. Fontes Rainer said in an interview Sunday, adding that her office worked “pretty quickly” to overhaul the federal health privacy rules.

“We heard of a problem that was happening. … And we wrote this rule in a way that allows for lawful reproducti­ve health care,” she said.

During the summer, some congressio­nal Democrats — including Sens. Patty Murray, D- Wash., and Ron Wyden, D-Ore. — urged the administra­tion to go further than what it had proposed. They unsuccessf­ully pressed for the final rules to include a requiremen­t that law enforcemen­t agencies obtain a warrant before forcing doctors and pharmacist­s to hand over patients’ private medical informatio­n. Instead, HHS is requiring plans and providers to get an attestatio­n in some instances from those seeking medical records that the informatio­n won’t be used for a prohibited purpose.

 ?? Evan Vucci/Associated Press ?? President Joe Biden speaks about abortion access during a Democratic National Committee event on Oct. 18, 2022, in Washington. The medical records of women will be shielded from criminal investigat­ions if they cross state lines to seek an abortion where it is legal, according to a new rule the Biden administra­tion finalized Monday.
Evan Vucci/Associated Press President Joe Biden speaks about abortion access during a Democratic National Committee event on Oct. 18, 2022, in Washington. The medical records of women will be shielded from criminal investigat­ions if they cross state lines to seek an abortion where it is legal, according to a new rule the Biden administra­tion finalized Monday.

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